A tech-focused venture studio for startups & SMEs

Wispit ventures is running by Dimitris Dimosiaris, a builder who solves real problems with technology and occasionally builds his own products.

[ 01 / 04 ]
What inspired me

WISPIT 2 is a star 437 light-years away. NASA recently photographed a baby planet caught in the act of forming. The earliest snapshot of a world becoming. That image stuck with me.

It's the stage I find most interesting and most neglected. Via Wispit, I work with founders and businesses at that earliest moment, and build my own products by the same principles.

[ 02 / 04 ]
How I can help
[ Mentorship & advisory ]

Cut through the early noise

Early-stage is loud. I help founders filter the noise and think clearly while decisions are reversible, avoiding mistakes that compound quietly.

[ MVP Development ]

Turn conviction into a working product

The hard part isn’t code; it’s deciding what to build. I build lean MVPs and automate manual workflows to deliver real output without overbuilding.

[ Fractional CTO ]

Lead technical, without the full-time cost

The wrong foundation costs more to fix than to get right. I step in at the inflection point to build technical architecture that actually holds.

[ 03 / 04 ]
My own bets
Brandseal logo [ Live · Launching Q2 2026 ]

Brandseal

A platform that helps startups manage their email signatures as they grow. Launching Q2 2026.

Siftray logo
Siftray logo [ Coming soon ]

Siftray

Coming soon.

Coming soon

[ 04 / 04 ]
Who's behind it

Hi, I’m Dimitris

I work across the full stack, from database architecture and server-side infrastructure to frontend interfaces and visual identity. My primary stack is Laravel and PHP, with MySQL, and JavaScript handling most of what a product needs to go from zero to live. Over the years I have managed over 230,000 lines of code across four major products.

What that means in practice is that I don't hand off the design to someone else and wait. I handle the branding, the DevOps, the integrations, and the code in the same cycle. It's a slower way to build a team eventually, but a faster way to ship something real at the beginning, when speed and coherence matter more than specialization.